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Power Transportation

Fast-Charging EV Batteries With Nickel Foil (ieee.org) 193

IEEE Spectrum reports that "Standard electric-vehicle batteries can recharge much of their range in just 10 minutes with the addition of a thin sheet of nickel inside them, a new study finds." This could provide a welcome and economically attractive alternative to expensive EVs that carry massive and massively expensive battery packs. If faster-charging options were available, enabling the EV's sticker price to drop substantially, some researchers suspect consumers' EV phobia and industry dogma against "range anxiety" could be overcome....

In the new study, researchers experimented with a lithium-ion battery with a roughly 560-kilometer range when fully charged. (The battery's energy density was 265 watt-hours-per-kilogram.) By adding an ultrathin nickel foil to its interior [to heat the battery quickly], they could recharge it to 70 percent in 11 minutes for a roughly 400-km range, and 75 percent in 12 minutes for a roughly 440-km range.

"Our technology enables smaller, faster-charging batteries to be deployed for mass adoption of affordable electric cars," says study senior author Chao-Yang Wang, a battery engineer at Pennsylvania State University....

The scientists detailed their findings online in the journal Nature.

Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader gunner2028 for sharing the story.
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Fast-Charging EV Batteries With Nickel Foil

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  • while at the same time you mention a pretty valid shortcoming of existing battery solutions.

    • by Sique ( 173459 ) on Sunday October 23, 2022 @10:50AM (#62990655) Homepage
      Phobia refers to the fact that for most people with normal usage patterns, range is not an issue at all. If you use your car for the daily commute, any range above 100 miles or similar would be wasted. Your car is sitting idle in diverse parking lots for 23 hrs anyway every day, a time you could use to charge the car.
      • by Compuser ( 14899 )

        Most people who live in apartment buildings or private homes with older wiring cannot charge at home. For those people, going to a charging station and waiting an hour or two to charge is a problem. It may be doable once a week but not more often than that. People work until they drop nowadays so even a half hour extra to charge is too much for most, other than on a day off.
        So let's say your commute is 50 miles per day. Now you need 7*50=350 miles to go through the week. But of course batteries degrade fast

        • by shilly ( 142940 )

          Everyone's a fan of faster charging and longer ranges, but your maths is way off the real world.

          To make your maths work, you:
          - Assumed a 50 mile commute (average distance driven in US is about 36 miles per day, 20 in UK; https://www.kbb.com/car-advice... [kbb.com] for US data from DoT)
          - Assumed a seven day working week, or that weekend driving was the same distance as weekday driving
          - Assumed regular charging to 100% is a bad idea (not true at all: BMS manages charging, you don't actually reach 100% bc of buffering,

      • Phobia refers to the fact that for most people with normal usage patterns, range is not an issue at all.

        But just don't you dare be abnormal or you're fucked.

    • while at the same time you mention a pretty valid shortcoming of existing battery solutions.

      Would it be easier for people to accept the label of fucking procrastinator instead, because I know far too many Gen-ignorant who treat their phone battery and gas tank the same; drain it down to zero percent every time and never plan ahead.

      Too harsh? It'll be easier to accept this reality than continuing to hear consumers whine and bitch about slow recharge times in their 1500-mile range EV a decade from now.

      • by Latent Heat ( 558884 ) on Sunday October 23, 2022 @11:10AM (#62990711)

        Geek marketing technique.

        If my product doesn't meet your needs, it is because you are a whining, bitchy and lazy ingrate of its marvelous tech.

        • Geek marketing technique.

          If my product doesn't meet your needs, it is because you are a whining, bitchy and lazy ingrate of its marvelous tech.

          The "Top 10 worst passwords" list hasn't changed in literally decades regardless of increased risk and harm, proving ignorance hasn't changed. Neither has human procrastination. In fact, tech has made it worse.

          Sorry, but your "marketing" arguments don't apply so much anymore. I wish I was more wrong about users today. But sadly, even you know I'm right. We'll eventually make a 3000-mile EV, and STILL have whiny lazy procrastinators bitching about dead batteries and recharge times.

    • I doubt it's helpful to accuse people of "phobia" while at the same time you mention a pretty valid shortcoming of existing battery solutions.

      Translation: "How dare you accurately describe me!"

    • The main shortcoming is the price... not sure if that's what you were referring to. But yeah, phobia is a weird way to put it.

    • a pretty valid shortcoming

      The shortcoming is only valid for people suffering from a specific phobia. Unless you drive professionally the fear or anxiety of range is very much irrational thinking these days.

      "Oh but thegarbz, I do road trips to my meemaws!!!!" Yeah go take a break at a charging station like a normal person.

      • most new EV drivers have it for a week or two then realise its not rational, a bit like a brand new ICE driver who also hasn't got used to what the fuel gauge represents in distance.
  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Sunday October 23, 2022 @11:13AM (#62990715)

    Hopefully at least a few of the many, many university press releases that have been posted here over the past few years will eventually lead to actual improvements in the batteries made available to us.

    • by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Sunday October 23, 2022 @11:55AM (#62990817)
      It's funny because the perception of no progress exists in batteries even though on the ground, everything has changed. 30 years ago, your telephone was powered by wires, you put 3 D cells into your flashlight, AA's in your walkman, ni-cads (or nitro) into your RC toys, mix 2-stroke oil into the gas for all your garden tools, compressed air for your shop tools, and of course gasoline for your car. EVERYTHING has changed! It's rechargeable batteries everywhere.
    • Hopefully at least a few of the many, many university press releases that have been posted here over the past few years will eventually lead to actual improvements in the batteries made available to us.

      Good news for you. ... Well actually good news for everyone except you. Batteries have improved a lot and the modern lithium battery (or other chemistries we have available) are nothing like the batteries of old many thanks university (and private) research into the topics which have led to higher densities, higher ampacity, longer life, safer designs, etc.

      Why not good news for you? Well unfortunately it means you're ignorant. And since you've posted the same comment in every Slashdot article and had it's p

  • Interesting that the argument here is all about if electric cars are a good idea or not. Unfortunately the argument doesn't seem to be about if the technology is good or not (which I guess in these days is no longer a priority for slashdot) or if the concept of an integrated battery heater makes sense. Since arguing tech isn't in fashion here anymore, how about arguing about the product name, or at least the logo in the screenshot in the actual article. I think "FastLion" is a pretty clever name / logo. I w
  • The batteries will likely cost more than the energy you charge them with.
    • by shilly ( 142940 )

      1. Improvements are happening in both areas
      2. Batteries last ages. Here's the calculations once again. I have a Renault Zoe, 52kWh battery, range 245 miles. Battery warranty is 8 years for 80% (ie they give me a new one if it goes below 200 miles range before 2028, I bought in 2020). Am I going to need to use that warranty? Nope. Due to the fancy clever battery management system, the battery lasts somewhere around 750 full discharge cycles before reaching 80% of charge. That's 750 * c230 miles = 172,500 mil

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